Next Thursday’s meeting of the ECB Governing Council is eagerly awaited. The rate hike decision has been pre-announced so the more important question is whether the new tool to address unwarranted sovereign spread widening will be unveiled. The rationale for such an instrument is well understood but its design and use raise several questions. One is easy to answer. To avoid a conflict with the monetary policy stance, bond purchases by the central bank would need to sterilized. The others are more challenging. Where is the threshold to call a spread widening ‘unwarranted’? Should the ECB be clear or ambiguous on this threshold and on its reaction when it would be reached? The final question concerns moral hazard and, hence, conditionality
Chinese economic activity contracted by 2.6% quarter-on-quarter in Q2 2022, with almost zero growth (0.4%) year-on-year. This poor performance was primarily the result of mobility restrictions introduced in several of the country’s provinces in response to the latest wave of the Covid19 pandemic, with the strictest restrictions in force from March to May in major economic centres such as Shanghai. The economic shock in Q2 2022 was severe and unexpected, but was nevertheless less violent than that in Q1 2020, when the lockdown measures introduced at the beginning of the crisis resulted in a collapse in activity of 10.3% q/q and 6.9% y/y.
The three-month moving average growth for the UK was 0.4% in May (3.5% y/y), above the expectations (0%). The Office for National Statistics (ONS) provides a detailed analysis of monthly changes in economic activity. After contractions in March and April, GDP returned to growth in May (+0.5% m/m). This growth was driven by the three main sectors: services , production and construction.
Since 8 July, a new governmental scheme has offered an ‘anti-inflation’ cheque of EUR200 per person to 2.7 million of the most vulnerable Spanish households. This measure is part of a total package of EUR9 billion, approved by the authorities at the end of June. This also includes another cut in VAT on electricity (from 10% to 5%) and a cut in travel costs. These steps to support households’ purchasing power are welcome as inflationary pressures continue to rise.
Between 5 and 12 July, 6.2 million new cases of Covid-19 were reported around the world, a 15% increase compared with the previous week and the fourth consecutive week of rising infections. Case numbers rose in all regions. Europe saw the largest increase (figure 1): infections rose by 20% to 3 million, representing 48% of the global total.